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Germany train strikes: How services in major cities will be impacted during the week-long walkout

Train drivers in Germany began an almost week-long strike in the early hours of this morning.

It is the latest in a series of walkouts over working hours, conditions and pay. Union GDL said it has rejected a pay offer made on Friday by German rail operator Deutsche Bahn (DB).

"With the third and supposedly improved offer, Deutsche Bahn has once again shown that it is undeterred in pursuing its previous course of refusal and confrontation - there is no trace of any desire to reach agreement," the union said in a press release on Monday.

Earlier this month, rail travel was brought to a 'near standstill' in Germany when GDL union members went on strike.

The passenger train strike began at 2am on 24 January and will last until 6am on Monday 29 January.

The GDL union voted overwhelmingly to authorise 'fully-fledged' strikes at state-owned DB. 

The group staged a 24-hour 'warning strike' on 8 December, a common tactic in German wage negotiations, but the disagreement continues to escalate.

Following a three-day walkout earlier this month, the current strike will be the longest to date in the ongoing row.

The central issue is the union’s call for shift workers’ hours to be reduced from 38 to 35 hours per week without a pay reduction, a demand at which employers so far have baulked.

GDL is seeking a raise of €555 per month for employees plus a one-time payment of up to €3,000 to counter inflation. DB said earlier this month that it made an offer that amounts to an 11 per cent raise.

It has also said shift workers can move from a 38 to a 37 hour week from 2026, or receive extra pay if they want to remain on their current hours.

Deutsche Bahn says that longer trains will be used for the available journeys to accommodate as many people as

Read more on euronews.com
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